Saturday, February 2, 2013

Sometimes, It's The Little Bites

I have to be honest.  There are SO many big projects going on around here - at the same time, mind you - that it feels good to check a few of the little boxes off the list.  One thing that's been totally cramping my style is the unfinished transition from the sunroom/family room/Florida room to the laundry room/mudroom/entry.  Note to self: pick a name for these rooms, would ya?  This is one of those little jobs that took only a little bit of a time commitment  but cleared a nice chunk of mental space for me.  Does that make sense?



I was getting tired of tripping over that little edge of the flooring.  It's hard to tell, but it was about 3/8ths of an inch higher on one side.  Oh, and see that little hand there?

That was my little helper for the job.



'Helper'

I should mention that he was also the photographer for most of this project.












 Yeah.  Bear with me for this one.

I started by buying a 12-foot equalizer strip in titanium from Home Depot for about $30.00.

(image from Home Depot.ca)
(The 12-foot length doesn't come with it's own screws, so be prepared to shell out an additional $.93)

I needed to cut it to match the opening which was about 7.5 feet.  John suggested I use his "fancy, fancy hacksaw."  His words.  Not mine.

I started cutting.



My positioning was all wrong and I kept scratching the strip - which was frustrating - so I asked the resident muscle man to step in and show me how it's done.



 And show me he did.  Work that fancy hacksaw.

Once it was cut down, I brought it over to the uneven flooring fiasco and double-checked that it fit.  Normally, you would put this puppy in after you've put in your doorjambs and floor trim.  I don't always necessarily do things in the order they were intended.  I don't care.  Neither does honey badger.

via

Since I *was* putting it in before the floor trim, I wanted to make sure that I left room on each side for the baseboards.  I just used a spacer block the same thickness as my floor trim to keep things on the up and up.



I lined the strip up so that when I drove the screws in, I still left some expansion room for the floor.  I started out just trying to push the screws in with my screwdriver as I turned them.  Not ideal.  The screw kept slipping on the vinyl tile underneath and would end up pinching my fingers.  Hard.


 I figured it would work better if I predrilled a little pilot hole in each opening to give the teeny, tiny screws a some gentle encouragement to stay in one place and stop freaking hurting me.

But I couldn't find my small drill bit.

Scratch that.

I couldn't be bothered to go look for my small drill bit and I MacGyver'ed this mutha by finding a flat-head nail to use for my pilot hole.



Like.  A.  Charm.

I gave the nail a forceful lovetap (oxymoron, much?), removed it and screwed in the Lilliputian screws.


Rinse and repeat about 14 more times.




My feet are much happier.  I'm not trippin' any more, yo.  Sometimes the little bites have the biggest impact on the every day.


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